Secondary Osteoporosis
Updated March 2026 · 12 min read
Celiac Disease and Osteoporosis: What Canadian Patients Need to Know
Celiac disease affects approximately 1% of Canadians — roughly 380,000 people — and it's one of the most common secondary causes of osteoporosis. The connection is direct and serious: untreated celiac damages the small intestine's ability to absorb calcium and vitamin D, the two nutrients most critical to bone density. Many Canadian adults with celiac aren't assessed for bone loss. This gap is preventable.
Why Celiac Disease Damages Bone
When someone with celiac disease eats gluten, their immune system attacks the lining of the small intestine. Over time, this destroys the villi — the finger-like projections that dramatically increase the gut's absorptive surface area. The result is malabsorption across multiple nutrients, with particularly severe consequences for:
- Calcium: The duodenum (first section of small intestine) is the primary site of active calcium absorption, and it's also the site most severely affected by celiac-related damage. Even with adequate dietary calcium intake, absorption is dramatically impaired.
- Vitamin D: Fat-soluble vitamins including vitamin D are absorbed in the small intestine; villous atrophy from celiac causes vitamin D deficiency in a significant proportion of patients. And without adequate vitamin D, calcium absorption is further impaired — a compounding problem.
- Phosphorus and magnesium: Also involved in bone mineralisation, and also malabsorbed in active celiac disease.
Secondary hyperparathyroidism is a common downstream consequence. When blood calcium stays chronically low because of malabsorption, the parathyroid glands respond by pulling calcium from bone to normalize blood levels. The bone loss is progressive and cumulative — often occurring silently for years or decades before celiac is diagnosed.
How Common Is Bone Disease in Celiac?
The data is sobering:
- 40–70% of newly diagnosed adult celiac patients have osteopenia (low bone density) at the time of diagnosis
- 10–30% have osteoporosis at diagnosis, even when diagnosed relatively young
- Studies show the average Canadian with celiac disease is diagnosed 6–10 years after symptom onset — meaning years of bone loss before any intervention
- Women with celiac have 2–3 times the risk of a fragility fracture compared to non-celiac women of the same age
- Men with celiac are similarly affected but are diagnosed even later on average, increasing the cumulative damage
Silent or atypical celiac is the norm in Canadian adults — only a minority present with classic gastrointestinal symptoms. Many are diagnosed during workup for osteoporosis itself, or for anemia, fatigue, or infertility. This means bone density testing in newly diagnosed celiac patients isn't optional — it should be standard.
Should You Have a DEXA Scan?
Yes. Osteoporosis Canada includes celiac disease as one of the conditions that qualifies for DEXA bone density testing covered under provincial health plans — even in patients who would not otherwise meet age-based criteria. If you've been diagnosed with celiac disease at any age, ask your GP for a DEXA scan referral. This is a covered investigation.
Timing: ideally within 1–2 years of celiac diagnosis, and then:
- After 1–2 years on a strict gluten-free diet, to assess bone density recovery
- Every 2–3 years if initial BMD is low or you have other risk factors
- Standard monitoring intervals (3–5 years) if BMD is normal and diet is well-controlled
How the Gluten-Free Diet Affects Bone Recovery
The good news: a strict, sustained gluten-free diet allows intestinal healing and substantially improves calcium and vitamin D absorption. BMD recovery after starting a gluten-free diet is well-documented — typically 3–5% improvement in lumbar spine BMD in the first 1–2 years in newly diagnosed patients.
The caveats:
- Recovery is incomplete in some patients, particularly those diagnosed in adulthood after years of unrecognized disease. Lost peak bone mass from childhood/adolescence cannot be fully replaced.
- Strict compliance matters enormously. Even small amounts of inadvertent gluten exposure re-trigger the immune response and impair absorption. The gluten-free diet needs to be genuinely strict, not approximate.
- Older patients: People diagnosed after menopause or in their 60s–70s have less capacity for BMD recovery because of the age-related decline overlay. They are more likely to need medication for bone protection in addition to diet.
The strict gluten-free diet alone is not always enough: For patients with significant bone loss at diagnosis (T-score below -2.0), supplementation and potentially medication are needed alongside dietary management.
Calcium and Vitamin D: Targets for Celiac Patients
Calcium
Standard recommendations apply, but are harder to meet with celiac:
- Adults 19–50: 1,000 mg/day elemental calcium
- Adults 51+: 1,200 mg/day elemental calcium
- During active intestinal inflammation, absorption efficiency is low — calcium citrate is better absorbed than calcium carbonate in this context, as it doesn't require stomach acid for absorption
Dietary calcium sources are preferable to supplements when absorption allows. Canadian fortified dairy, fortified non-dairy milks, canned fish with bones (salmon, sardines), and leafy greens are all gluten-free calcium sources. See the calcium-rich foods guide for a comprehensive list.
Vitamin D
Celiac patients frequently require higher vitamin D supplementation than the general population:
- Standard Health Canada recommendation: 600 IU/day (under 70), 800 IU/day (over 70)
- For celiac patients with confirmed vitamin D deficiency: 1,500–2,000 IU/day or higher under medical supervision to achieve serum 25-OH-D levels above 75 nmol/L
- Serum vitamin D testing (25-hydroxyvitamin D) is warranted at diagnosis and periodically thereafter — not just for celiac, but for all patients on bone-protective therapy
- Canada's northern latitude means insufficient vitamin D from sun alone even in summer for most Canadians — see vitamin D in the Canadian winter
Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is the preferred form. High-dose vitamin D gel capsules from major Canadian pharmacies are relatively inexpensive and gluten-free — confirm with pharmacist if you have concerns about excipients.
When Osteoporosis Medication Is Needed
For many celiac patients, particularly those diagnosed younger with mild-to-moderate bone loss, the gluten-free diet plus adequate calcium and vitamin D will improve BMD sufficiently over time. However, medication is typically needed when:
- T-score is -2.5 or below (osteoporosis range) and fracture risk is elevated
- T-score is in osteopenia range but FRAX score places 10-year fracture risk in the moderate-to-high category — check your risk with the fracture risk calculator
- BMD does not recover after 1–2 years on a strict gluten-free diet with adequate supplementation
- Age at diagnosis is post-menopausal for women, or over 50 for men, with significant bone loss
Bisphosphonates (alendronate, risedronate) are first-line for celiac-associated osteoporosis. Important: oral bisphosphonates require an intact esophagus and the ability to stay upright for 30 minutes after taking them — relevant because some celiac patients have esophageal motility issues. For those who can't tolerate oral bisphosphonates, IV zoledronic acid (Aclasta, one infusion per year) avoids the gastrointestinal route entirely and is particularly well-suited for celiac patients.
Note on Bisphosphonate Absorption in Active Celiac
Oral bisphosphonates are poorly absorbed even under ideal conditions (~0.5–1% of the dose). In active celiac disease with intestinal inflammation, absorption may be even more impaired. This is an additional reason why IV zoledronic acid is sometimes preferred for celiac patients who have not yet fully healed on the gluten-free diet.
Gluten-Free Diet: Bone Health Risks and Benefits
A well-planned gluten-free diet is bone-neutral or bone-positive compared to a standard diet containing gluten — if the celiac patient was eating gluten previously. However, a poorly planned gluten-free diet can introduce its own nutritional gaps:
- Gluten-free processed foods (GF breads, cereals, crackers) are often not enriched with calcium and vitamin D the way their gluten-containing equivalents are, and may be lower in fibre and higher in refined starches. They are not nutritionally equivalent substitutions.
- Calcium-fortified GF foods exist but require active label-reading. Fortified GF plant milks are a reliable calcium source in a GF diet.
- Phytates in GF grains: Rice, corn, tapioca — common GF staples — are lower in phytates than wheat. This is actually a small positive for calcium absorption from a GF diet.
Celiac and the Secondary Osteoporosis Workup
If you've been diagnosed with osteoporosis and celiac has NOT been excluded, it should be. The standard secondary osteoporosis workup typically includes tissue transglutaminase IgA (tTG-IgA) as a celiac screen. About 5–10% of patients presenting with otherwise unexplained low bone density turn out to have undiagnosed celiac disease.
See the broader discussion of secondary causes of osteoporosis in Canada for other conditions that should be excluded when bone loss is out of proportion to age and risk factors.
Celiac Disease Resources in Canada
- Canadian Celiac Association (celiac.ca): The national patient organization. Provincial chapters provide local support and resources including restaurant and travel guidance.
- Osteoporosis Canada (osteoporosis.ca): Includes celiac disease in secondary osteoporosis screening guidelines.
- Dietitian referral: Many provincial health plans cover dietitian visits for medically necessary dietary management — celiac disease qualifies. A dietitian can review your GF diet for nutritional adequacy and calcium/vitamin D gaps.
Key facts to remember:
- 40–70% of adults newly diagnosed with celiac have osteopenia at diagnosis
- A strict gluten-free diet partially reverses bone loss — but isn't always sufficient alone
- Calcium citrate is better absorbed than calcium carbonate in active intestinal inflammation
- IV zoledronic acid avoids the GI tract and suits celiac patients who can't tolerate oral bisphosphonates
- DEXA scan is warranted for all celiac patients and is covered under provincial plans
- Undiagnosed celiac should be excluded in unexplained osteoporosis
Celiac diagnosis in progress? Do not start a gluten-free diet before completing your diagnostic workup. Eating gluten-free before the blood tests and biopsy are done will falsely normalize the results and can delay or prevent an accurate diagnosis.
Medical Disclaimer: This page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Celiac disease and its associated bone complications require individual assessment and management by a qualified healthcare provider. Do not adjust your supplements, medications, or diet based on this page alone. Osteoporosis Canada (osteoporosis.ca) and the Canadian Celiac Association (celiac.ca) are authoritative Canadian references for patients and healthcare providers.